The Cricket War
Text 25
Bob Thurber
The Cricket War
That summer an army of crickets started a war with my father. They picked a
fight the minute they invaded our cellar. Dad didn't care for bugs much more
than Mamma, but he could tolerate a few spiders and assorted creepy crawlers
living in the basement. Every farm house had them. A part of rustic living, and
something you needed to put up with if you wanted the simple life.
He told Mamma: Now that were living out here, you cant
be jerking your head and swallowing your gum over what's plain natural, Ellen.
But she was a city girl through and through and had no ears when it came to
defending vermin. She said a cricket was just a noisy cockroach, just a dumb
horny bug that wouldn't shut up. She said in the city there were blocks of
buildings overrun with cockroaches with no way for people to get rid of them.
No sir, no way could she sleep with all that chirping going on; then to prove
her point she wouldn't go to bed. She drank coffee and smoked my fathers
cigarettes and she paced between the couch and the TV. Next morning she
threatened to pack up and leave, so Dad drove to the hardware store and hurried
back. He squirted poison from a jug with a spray nozzle. He sprayed the
basement and all around the foundation of the house. When he was finished he
told us that was the end of it.
But what he should have said was: This is the
beginning, The beginning of our war, the beginning of our destruction. I often
think back to that summer and try to imagine him delivering a speech with words
like that, because for the next fourteen days mamma kept finding dead crickets
in the clean laundry. Shed shake out a towel or a sheet and a dead black
cricket would roll across the linoleum. Sometimes the cat would corner one, and
swat it around like he was playing hockey, then carry it away in his mouth. Dad
said swallowing a few dead crickets wouldn't hurt as long as the cat didn't eat
too many. Each time Mamma complained he told her it was only natural that we'd
be finding a couple of dead ones for a while.
Soon live crickets started showing up in the kitchen
and bathroom. Mamma freaked because she thought they were the dead crickets
come back to haunt, but Dad said these was definitely a new batch, probably
coming up on the pipes. He fetched his jug of poison and sprayed beneath the
sink and behind the toilet and all along the baseboard until the whole house
smelled of poison, and then he sprayed the cellar again, and then he went
outside and sprayed all around the foundation leaving a foot-wide moat of
poison. Stop them son of a bitches right in their tracks, he told us.
For a couple of
weeks we went back to finding dead crickets in the laundry. Dad told us to keep
a sharp look out. He suggested that we'd all be better off to hide as many as
we could from mamma. I fed a few dozen to the cat who I didn't like because he
scratched and bit for no reason. I hoped the poison might kill him so we could
get a puppy. Once in a while we found a dead cricket in the bathroom or beneath
the kitchen sink. We didn't know if these were fresh dead or old dead the cat
had played with and then abandoned. Dad cracked a few in half to show us that
they were fresh. Then he used the rest of the poison to give the house another
dose. A couple of weeks later, when both live and dead crickets kept turning
up, he emptied the cellar of junk. He borrowed Uncle Burt's pickup and hauled a
load to the dump. Then he burned a lot of bundled newspapers and magazines
which he said the crickets had turned into nests.
He stood over that fire with a rake in one hand and a
garden hose in the other. He wouldn't leave it even when Mamma sent me out to
fetch him for supper. He wouldn't leave the fire, and she wouldn't put supper
on the table. Both my brothers were crying. Finally she went out and got him
herself. And while we ate, the wind lifted some embers onto the wood pile. The
only gasoline was in the lawn mowers fuel tank but that was enough to create an
explosion big enough to reach the house. Once the roof caught, there wasn't
much anyone could do.
After the fire trucks left I made the mistake of
volunteering to stay behind while Mamma took the others to Aunt Gail's. I
helped Dad and Uncle Burt and two men I'd never seen before carry things out of
the house and stack them by the road. In the morning we'd come back in Burt's
truck and haul everything away. We worked into the night and we didn't talk
much, hardly a word about anything that mattered, and Dad didn't offer any plan
that he might have for us now. Uncle Burt passed a bottle around, but I shook
my head when it came to me. I kicked and picked through the mess, dumb struck
at how little there was to salvage, while all around the roar of crickets
magnified our silence.
Будь-те первым, поделитесь мнением с остальными.